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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>peter chao</b><p>At last weekend's Tri-Star show in SF I was close to purchasing a '41 Playball Pee Wee Reese, when I looked closely at the card it appeared to be faded so I passed on the card. I've seen this card faded and with a brighter more distinctive background. <br /><br />I've always believed that the fading was simply from sunlight, but I'm not sure. Are there any other explanations for the fading? Maybe, it's a printing variation?<br /><br />Peter C.
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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>Anthony</b><p>I've seen lots of yellowing on Playball stock, especially '41's. Someone explained it once, but basically it was just cheaper paper.
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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>Paul</b><p>In my experience, 41 Playballs are very susceptible to fading in sunlight, especially the red tones.
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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>John Harrell</b><p>Peter,<br /><br />The 41 PB set has two types of paper, a higher quality paper used in 41 for the low series and a lower quality paper used in the 41 hi numbers and 42. The Reese is a hi number card and is more susceptible to browning and possible fading. You can tell low #'s from 42 by the absence of the date on the back of the card.<br /><br />John
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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>peter chao</b><p>John,<br /><br />Thanks for the explanation, I'm going to hold out for a more attractive '41 Playball Reese.<br /><br />Peter C.<br /><br />Edited to add: Was there a 1942 Playball set?
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'41 Playball Pee Wee Reese
Posted By: <b>Paul</b><p>I think what John is saying is that the 1941 high numbers were actually distributed in 1942. I hadn't heard that before, but it could very well be true. There is no separate 1942 set.
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